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The James W. Dalton Highway, usually referred to as the Dalton Highway (and signed as Alaska Route 11), is a 414-mile (666 km) [1] road in Alaska. It begins at the Elliott Highway , north of Fairbanks , and ends at Deadhorse (an unincorporated community within the CDP of Prudhoe Bay ) near the Arctic Ocean and the Prudhoe Bay Oil Fields .
Indonesian National Route 1 is a major road in Java, Indonesia. It passes through 5 provinces along the north coast, Banten, Jakarta, West Java, Central Java and East Java. [1] It connects Merak and Ketapang. [2] Merak is a ferry terminal to Sumatra and Ketapang is ferry terminal to Bali.
Indonesia has about 283,102 kilometres (175,911 mi) of paved highways and 213,505 kilometres (132,666 mi) of unpaved highways (As of 2011 estimate). [117] Four of Indonesia's main highways are classified as parts of Asian Highway Network: AH2 section in Java and Bali, AH25 and AH151 in Sumatra, AH152 in Java and AH150 section in Kalimantan ...
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This is a list of toll roads in Indonesia grouped per province. Partially opened, under-construction, and proposed toll roads are listed in italics . The toll roads are operated by state-owned enterprises , mainly by Jasa Marga , Hutama Karya , Waskita Toll Road , and various private companies like Citra Marga Nusaphala Persada and Astra Infra .
Depok-Antasari Toll Road linking to Depok and planned to go further to Bogor; Jagorawi Toll Road linking to Bogor and Ciawi in the south; Jakarta–Cikampek Toll Road linking to Bekasi and Cikampek in the east; The city's 9.5% average annual growth rate of motorized vehicles far exceeded the 0.01% increase in road length between 2005 and 2010. [17]
Gedebage–Tasikmalaya–Cilacap Toll Road (tender preparation) Cilacap–Yogyakarta Toll Road (awaits for Getaci & Yoglo to be finished) Semarang–Demak Toll Road (section 1 under construction, section 2 finished) Semarang Harbour Road (Semarang–Kendal) Toll Road (planned) Solo–Yogyakarta Toll Road (under construction)
The book originated in 1973 as a typewritten publication, A Traveler's Notes: Indonesia, printed by Dalton when he was travelling in Australia. [1] This led Dalton to form his company, Moon Publications, when he returned to California, and expand and publish his Travel Notes as a full book, the Indonesia Handbook.